json5
noyaml
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json5 | noyaml | |
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94 | 9 | |
6,291 | 414 | |
1.3% | - | |
0.0 | 5.3 | |
5 months ago | about 2 months ago | |
JavaScript | CSS | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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json5
- JSON5 β JSON for Humans
- Why the fuck are we templating YAML? (2019)
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I pre-released my project "json-responder" written in Rust
JSON5 support
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topoconfig: enhancing config declarations with graphs
Meanwhile, formats have been evolving (JSON5, YAML), config entry points are constantly changing. These fluctuations, fortunately, were covered by tools like the cosmiconfig.
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That's a Lot of YAML
I think JSON5 is fairly close to this: https://json5.org
I reckon the only thing it's missing to be truly accessible to non-techies is that string values still need to be quoted, i.e. you can't have:
key: this is my value
(I'm definitely not saying it would be a good idea to allow quotes to be dropped, just that that's the only potential stumbling block I see for non-techies.)
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XML is better than YAML
I believe that's JSON5.
https://github.com/json5/json5
It's my preferred configuration file format, it fixes all the problems I have with JSON (trailing commas, comments) without turning it into a mess full of gotchas like YAML.
- Fx β Terminal JSON Viewer
- What Is Wrong with TOML?
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π 'GET' API in API Maker
JSON 5 support
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TySON: a native go library that lets you use TypeScript as an embedded configuration language without depending on Node or V8
I would like to see mention of JSON5 which is 11 years its elder. For comments in JSON, JSON5 is a good starting point.
noyaml
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Kubernetes Through the Developer's Perspective
Most commonly written in YAML, these files are large and complex to read and understand. And being written in YAML comes with its challenges (and quirks) since it is an additional programming language that devs need to learn.
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JSON Canvas β An open file format for infinite canvas data
YAML is kind of like C++:
> You like C++ because you're only using 20% of it. And that's fine, everyone only uses 20% of C++, the problem is that everyone uses a different 20% :)
https://eli.thegreenplace.net/2009/10/17/the-c-bashing-seaso...
The YAML footguns are too numerous to reproduce here, so here are some sources:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3790454/how-do-i-break-a...
https://www.arp242.net/yaml-config.html
https://noyaml.com/
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Why the fuck are we templating YAML? (2019)
Relevant: https://noyaml.com/
YAML and its ecosystem is full of footguns and ergonomics problems, especially when the length of the document extends beyond the height of a user's editor or viewport. Loss of context with indentation, non-compliant or unsafe parsers, and strange boolean handling to name a few.
It becomes even worse when people decide that static YAML data files should have variable substitution or control flow via templating. "Stringly-typed programming" if you will. If we all started writing JSON text templates I think a lot of people would rightly argue we should write small stdlib-only programs in Python, Typescript, or Ruby to emit this JSON instead of using templated text files. Then it becomes apparent that the YAML template isn't a static data file at all, but part of a program which emits YAML as output. We're already exposing people to basic programming if we're using YAML templates. People brew a special kind of YAML-templated devops hell using tools like Kustomize and Helm, each of which are "just YAML" but are full of idiosyncracies and tool-specific behaviour which make the use of YAML almost coincidental rather than a necessity.
Yes, sometimes people would prefer to look at YAML instead of JSON, in which case I suggest you use a YAML serialization library, or pipe output into a tool like `yq` so you can view the pretty output. In a pinch you could even output JSON and then feed it through a YAML formatter.
The Kubernetes community seems to have this penetrating "oh, it's just YAML" philosophy which means we get mediocre DSLs in "just YAML" which actually encode a lot of nuanced and unintuitive behaviour which varies from tool to tool.
Look at kyverno, for examle: it uses _parentheses_ in YAML key names to change the semantics of security policies! https://kyverno.io/docs/writing-policies/validate/ . This is different to what I think is the (much better ideas of) something like kubewarden, gatekeeper, or jspolicy, which allow engineers to write their policies in anything that compiles to WASM, OPA, and Typescript/Javascript respectively.
We engineers, as a discipline, have decades of know-how building and using general purpose programming languages with type checkers, linters, packaging systems, and other tools, but we throw them all away as soon as YAML comes along. It's time to put the stringified YAML templates away and engage in the ecosystem of mature tools we already to use to perform one simple task they are already good at: dumping JSON on stdout.
Let's move the control flow back into the tool and out of the YAML.
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YAML's homepage is displayed in YAML
The webpage documenting some of the sharp edges of yaml is also displayed as an editable yaml document
https://noyaml.com/
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stopDoingJson
Itβs the least secure config format, even worse than XML IMO since itβs unsafe even with trusted inputs. https://noyaml.com/
- That's a Lot of YAML
What are some alternatives?
Json.NET - Json.NET is a popular high-performance JSON framework for .NET
yj - CLI - Convert between YAML, TOML, JSON, and HCL. Preserves map order.
hjson-js - Hjson for JavaScript
hjson - Hjson, a user interface for JSON
jq - Command-line JSON processor [Moved to: https://github.com/jqlang/jq]
doximus - static, smart and developer friendly API documentation generator
toml - Tom's Obvious, Minimal Language
json2jsii - Generates jsii-compatible structs from JSON schemas
jsonnet - Jsonnet - The data templating language
PyYAML
sublime-hjson - Hjson support for Sublime Text
crd-to-sample-yaml - Generate a sample YAML file from a CRD